dp activities in vienna
DESCRIPTION
Digital Preservation: Logical and bit-stream preservation using Plato and Eprints Introduction: Digital Preservation Recap. DP Activities in Vienna. Web Archiving (AOLA) in cooperation with the Austrian National Library DELOS DPC (EU FP6 NoE) DPE: Digital Preservation Europe (EU FP6 CA) - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
Digital Preservation: Logical and bit-stream preservation using
Plato and EprintsIntroduction: Digital Preservation Recap
Hannes Kulovits
Andreas RauberDavid TarrantAdam Field
Department of Software Technology and Interactive Systems
School of Electronics and Computer Science
Vienna University of [email protected]@ifs.tuwien.ac.at
University of Southampton, [email protected]@ecs.soton.ac.uk
DP Activities in Vienna
Web Archiving (AOLA)in cooperation with the Austrian National Library
DELOS DPC (EU FP6 NoE)
DPE: Digital Preservation Europe (EU FP6 CA)
PLANETS (EU FP6 IP)
eGovernment & Digital Preservationseries of projects with Federal Chancellery
National Working Group on Digital Preservationof the Austrian Computer Society, in cooperation with ONB
Digital Memory Engineering: National research studio
University of Southampton, UK
University of Southampton http://www.soton.ac.uk School of Electronics & Computer Science
http://www.ecs.soton.ac.uk
- EPrintshttp://www.epints.org
People in Preservation- Steve Hitchcock- David Tarrant- Chris Gutteridge- Tim Brody- Patrick McSweeny
EPrints Services- Adam Field- Tim Miles-Board
Introductions
You will: Understand the challenges in digital preservation and Address them on both layers physical and logical. Understand why we need to plan preservation activities Know a workflow to evaluate preservation strategies Be familiar with Plato and EPrints Be able to develop a specific preservation plan that is
optimized for- the objects in your institution- the users of your institution- the institutional requirements
What will you know after this tutorial?
Why do we need Digital Preservation?
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Why do we need Digital Preservation?
Why do we need Digital Preservation?
Digital Objects require specific environment to be accessible :- Files need specific programs- Programs need specific operating systems (-versions)- Operating systems need specific hardware components
SW/HW environment is not stable:- Files cannot be opened anymore- Embedded objects are no longer accessible/linked- Programs won‘t run- Information in digital form is lost
(usually total loss, no degradation) Digital Preservation aims at maintaining digital objects
authentically usable and accessible for long time periods.
Why do we need Digital Preservation?
Essential for all digital objects- Office documents, accounting, emails, …- Scientific datasets, sensor data, metadata, …- Applications, simulations,…
All application domains- Cultural heritage data- eGovernment, public administration- Science / Research- Industry- Health, pharmaceutical industry- Aviation, control systems, construction, …- Private data- …
Strategies for Digital Preservation
Strategies
(grouped according to Companion Document to UNESCO Charterhttp://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0013/001300/130071e.pdf)
Investment strategies: - Standardization, Data extraction, Encapsulation, Format limitations
Short-term approaches: - Museum, Backwards-compatibility, Version-migration, Reengineering
Medium- / long-term approaches: - Migration, Viewer, Emulation
Alternative approaches: - Non-digital Approaches, Data-Archeology
No single optimal solution for all objects
Migration
Transformation into different format, continuous or on-demand (Viewer)
+ Wide-spread adoption+ Possibility to compare to un-migrated object+ Immediately accessible- Unintended changes, specifically over sequence of
migrations- Cannot be used for all objects- Requires continuous action to migrate
Emulation
Emulation of hardware or software (operating system, applications)
+ Concept of emulation widely used+ Numerous emulators are available+ Potentially complete preservation of functionality+ Object is rendered identically- Object is rendered identically- Requires detailed documentation of system- Requires knowledge on how to operate current systems in
the future- Complex technology- Emulators must be emulated or migrated themselves- Emulators potentially erroneous/incomplete
Strategies for Digital Preservation
Strategies
(grouped according to Companion Document to UNESCO Charterhttp://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0013/001300/130071e.pdf)
Investment strategies: - Standardization, Data extraction, Encapsulation, Format limitations
Short-term approaches: - Museum, Backwards-compatibility, Version-migration, Reengineering
Medium- / long-term approaches: - Migration, Viewer, Emulation
Alternative approaches: - Non-digital Approaches, Data-Archeology
No single optimal solution for all objects
Digital Preservation
Is a complex task Requires a concise understanding of the objects, their
intellectual characteristics, the way they were created and used and how they will most likely be used in the future
Requires a continuous commitment to preserve objects to avoid the „digital dark hole“
Requires a solid, trusted infrastructure and workflows to ensure digital objects are not lost
Is essential to maintain electronic publications & data accessible
Will become more complex as digital objects become more complex
Needs to be defined in a preservation plan
Digital Preservation
Reference Models- Records Management, ISO 15489:2000- OAIS: Open Archival Information System, ISO 14721:2003
Audit & Certification Initiatives- RLG- National Archives and Records Administration Digital
Repository Certification Task Force:Trustworthy Repositories Audit & Certification: Criteria and Checklist (TRAC)
- NESTOR:Catalogue of Criteria of Trusted Digital Repositories
- DCC/DPE:DRAMBORA: Digital Repository Audit Method Based on Risk Assessment